1–2 Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah express a different approach to the future of Israel to that provided in the Earlier Prophets. Firstly, the nature and the dating of this part of the Hebrew Bible are discussed, suggesting the end of the fifth and the very beginning of the fourth century B.C. as the time of its origins. Secondly, the retrospect of the past in 1–2 Chronicles is presented with a very specific attitude towards the Exile. The article focuses on the detailed analysis of Ezra 4:1–5, a passage representing the very core of this book. Against the backdrop of the identity of the deputation visiting Jerusalem as seen by the author of Ezra and the completely different self-presentation of the envoys from the north, the serious conflict...
The OT books, Ezra and Nehemiah, are to be considered as one book. This is more or less the common ...
The essay “Edom in the Jacob Cycle (Gen *25–35): New Insights on Its Positive Relations with Israel,...
One of the most painful features of Judah\u27s exile in the early sixth century B.C. was the interru...
Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah express a different approach to the futureof Israel to that given in th...
This article addresses the way the book of Ezra-Nehemiah on one hand and Chronicles on the other ref...
Chronicles takes history and reconstructs it to make it more acceptable in terms of its time and pla...
My research question started from why the Jewish community called themselves 'Israel' in the post-ex...
"This book is one of the first modern collections of studies on important aspects of the Ezra figure...
n the era in which the Chronicler writes, the pressing question is: How will Judeans reestablish the...
For many pre-modern and modern critics, the emergence of Ezra among the post-exilic Jerusalem commun...
The Edict of Cyrus which both opens Ezra-Nehemiah (Ezra 1:1-4) and closes Chronicles (2 Chr 36:22-2...
Often neglected by casual Bible readers as well as Biblical scholars, the books of Chronicles offer ...
The Chronistic History, consisting of I and II chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah, constitutes a new hist...
This volume aims to examine the literary and socio-historical relationship between the Books of Chro...
The objective of this research project is to build a sound defense of the hypothesis that Genesis 22...
The OT books, Ezra and Nehemiah, are to be considered as one book. This is more or less the common ...
The essay “Edom in the Jacob Cycle (Gen *25–35): New Insights on Its Positive Relations with Israel,...
One of the most painful features of Judah\u27s exile in the early sixth century B.C. was the interru...
Chronicles and Ezra-Nehemiah express a different approach to the futureof Israel to that given in th...
This article addresses the way the book of Ezra-Nehemiah on one hand and Chronicles on the other ref...
Chronicles takes history and reconstructs it to make it more acceptable in terms of its time and pla...
My research question started from why the Jewish community called themselves 'Israel' in the post-ex...
"This book is one of the first modern collections of studies on important aspects of the Ezra figure...
n the era in which the Chronicler writes, the pressing question is: How will Judeans reestablish the...
For many pre-modern and modern critics, the emergence of Ezra among the post-exilic Jerusalem commun...
The Edict of Cyrus which both opens Ezra-Nehemiah (Ezra 1:1-4) and closes Chronicles (2 Chr 36:22-2...
Often neglected by casual Bible readers as well as Biblical scholars, the books of Chronicles offer ...
The Chronistic History, consisting of I and II chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah, constitutes a new hist...
This volume aims to examine the literary and socio-historical relationship between the Books of Chro...
The objective of this research project is to build a sound defense of the hypothesis that Genesis 22...
The OT books, Ezra and Nehemiah, are to be considered as one book. This is more or less the common ...
The essay “Edom in the Jacob Cycle (Gen *25–35): New Insights on Its Positive Relations with Israel,...
One of the most painful features of Judah\u27s exile in the early sixth century B.C. was the interru...